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  • WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 18 2006 12:00 PM

Wil Wheaton's Geek In Review: The Real Revenge of the Nerds

In recent years, geeks have become accepted (assimilated?) into the mainstream. It's hard to pin down one specific reason, but as a life-long geek, I can attest to the difference in social attitudes toward those of us who can quote Holy Grail from start to finish, or scrape an entire porn website's open directories, organize the resulting files and burn them to a CD with an eighteen line Perl script.

Shows like Malcolm in the Middle and Freaks and Geeks feature characters that geeks can identify with without making us a punchline, and websites like Think Geek specifically cater to us with T-shirts and gizmos that proudly shout to the world, "I'm a geek, and I'm proud!" When did we gain this acceptance, and how did it happen?

Set the wayback machine to 1978 and watch Animal House. Then, jump ahead and watch Revenge of the Nerds and Real Genius. While you're in the 80s, check out The Dark Crystal, too (not because it's relevant, but because it's a pretty fun movie to watch, and since you're already there, you may as well go for it. Hey, if you were a geekling back then, you may even recall being terrified out of your fucking mind by the Skeksis like I was.)

Anyway, these films all have one common theme: misfits are persecuted by the establishment, misfits fight back using intellect and guile, win the war, and get the girl. Geeks were apparently paying attention back then, because we learned that even though we were physically awkward and less interested in kickball than we were in the Fiend Folio, we could somehow use our intellect to one day turn the tables on our tormentors; an entire generation of geeks, whether they were aware of it or not—and whether we'll admit it now or not—were motivated to reach levels of power and success as adults so we could get back at them. When the personal computer came into our homes with programming languages pre-installed and we saw that we could create things using our brains, the first step toward that ultimate revenge was taken.

Over the years, those of us who were laughed at and tormented by the cool kids fooled around with our personal computers and sought escape in worlds like William Gibson's Neuromancer where intellect was celebrated and rewarded, while the cool kids spent their time in a superficial world that rewarded feathered hair, flipped-up collars, perfect teeth and careful navigation of what was capriciously deemed "cool" by the hivemind of the moment.

When technology and information became highly-prized commodities in the 90s as we were all getting out of college, those of us who had spent much of the 80s alone in our darkened bedrooms, bathed in the green or amber glow of a personal computer's CRT while we "jacked in" at 300 baud to FidoNet and the few of us who were lucky enough to have access to the real Matrix (ARPANet) when 56k was but a dream for mortals had a head start on an entirely new world. While the popular kids continued what Lester Bangs called "the long journey to the middle," we were using our passion for computers and knowledge to found companies and change the way people communicated with each other. It wasn't long before we became our own demographic, and not just any demographic—a demographic that was inherently smart, and had a lot of disposable income. Suddenly, mainstream companies were marketing to us, and in the dot com boom, we finally threw the massive parties we were never invited to when we were younger. The geeks may not have inherited the Earth, but we certainly had arrived, and now we got a say in what was cool.

I knew some of the computer hackers of the late 80s who were described in The Hacker Crackdown; in the 90s, many of them went to work for AT&T, UUNet, or other backbone Internet providers. They joked that, after years of trying to own the phone systems and the Internet with social engineering and brute force cracking, it had finally happened legitimately. Today, many of them own multi-million dollar security consulting firms. While Google is one assimilation away from being the new Borg, Microsoft rightfully earned that description and embodied it for at most of the last two decades. There's a joke about how much it must suck to be the guy who was Bill Gates' bully, but there's a real kernel of truth to it. I know that if I had anything to do with it, there are a few people who would never be able to quite get that credit rating fixed. Yeah, it's petty, but it takes a long time to get the taste of locker out of your mouth, believe me.

Tony Montana was right when he said, "First you get the money, then you get the power, then you get the women." We geeks just substituted computers for power, and, sadly, many of us have substituted home theaters for women . . . well, we are geeks, after all, and girls totally have cooties.

At least we're moderately cool, for the time being, and any cool kid who wants to argue with us better have a damn good firewall.

Wil Wheaton is the author of Just A Geek. His blog is pretty geeky, too.

 

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Comments
rosarandall

rosarandall

USA
March 2006

OCT 21, 2006 06:56 PM

best article ever. Haven't smiled so big in ages. biggrin

d20

d20

San Francisco, CA
September 2003

OCT 21, 2006 08:03 PM

WilWheaton said:
...those of us who can quote Holy Grail from start to finish...



i can quote it right now and have you ROTFLOL

MeghAnd

MeghAnd

USA
October 2004

OCT 21, 2006 11:42 PM

Amen!

Daxx

Daxx

Saint Augustine, FL
October 2006

OCT 25, 2006 02:38 PM


I
WilWheaton said:
...those of us who can quote Holy Grail from start to finish...

i can quote it right now and have you ROTFLOL



Love it!!!!!

btw...

geeks are sexy. love

Meli

Meli

Manchester, NH
October 2006

OCT 25, 2006 09:21 PM

Daxx said:

I
WilWheaton said:
...those of us who can quote Holy Grail from start to finish...

i can quote it right now and have you ROTFLOL



Love it!!!!!

btw...

geeks are sexy. love




Hell yes they are! While all my girlfriends are stuck with frat boys I have my very own super smart, computer savy son of a bitch. Geeks rule my world.

Oh, and for the record, The Dark Crystal also rules my world. And Labrynth too. I used to watch those in tandem. Never one without the other. ;-)

ZAMN

ZAMN

San Francisco, CA
July 2006

OCT 26, 2006 01:36 AM

*Throws fist up for some daps and Geek love.

JP wink wink wink wink

ether_medius

ether_medius

Toronto, ON
November 2004

OCT 26, 2006 01:09 PM

ooo aaa

wienus

wienus

San Antonio, TX
March 2005

OCT 26, 2006 01:39 PM

..all in the name of geekdom and truth.

Ainur

Ainur

I'm lost
May 2005

OCT 26, 2006 11:25 PM

Word to your moms
We came to drop bombs

Word, motherfucker. Word.

Mike11

Mike11

Titusville, FL
OLD SKOOL

OCT 29, 2006 10:24 AM

That was great Wil

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